
11-1-2005 Iowa:
Fear, desperation set in for some registered sex offenders who must move
John Chapman has rickety bones, an oxygen tank and a shameful past that's worn him down more than bad health ever could.
What he did with two 13-year-old girls nearly a decade ago put him in prison for nearly five years and on the Iowa Sex Offender Registry.
But Chapman, 73, wouldn't be in the fix he's is now — three days from being a homeless man on crutches — had he not switched apartments in June 2004. He had lived at the Elliott Apartments in downtown Des Moines before a state law went into effect that prohibits certain sex offenders from living near schools or child-care centers.
Chapman would have been exempt from the eviction proceedings that face roughly 300 others in the city, but he accepted his landlord's offer to switch apartments and have more room to park the electric scooter that helps him get around. He moved his belongings from Apartment 311 to Apartment 312. The front doors are 2 feet apart.
The units share a kitchen wall.
The move took less than an hour. But it was a move nonetheless, according to the law, and now Chapman must go.
"Please just find me a place to die," he said. "I'd just as soon take a beating than go through this."
Stories like Chapman's have become routine for Iowa authorities as they try to enforce the first round of eviction notices for registered sex offenders whose victims were minors.